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Dive into the research topics where Nelia T. Vermouth is active.

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Featured researches published by Nelia T. Vermouth.


Archives of Oral Biology | 1992

α-Amylase circadian rhythm of young rat parotid gland: An endogenous rhythm with maternal coordination

S.L. Bellavia; E.G. Sanz; R. Sereno; Nelia T. Vermouth

The circadian rhythm of alpha-amylase, E.C. 3.2.1.1. alpha-1,4-glucan-4-glucanohydrolase) in the parotid glands of 25-day-old rats were studied under different experimental designs (fasting, reversed photoperiod, constant lighting conditions and treatment with reserpine and alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine). The rhythm of fasted rats did not change. There were modifications in the rhythm of rats submitted to a reversed photoperiod or treated with reserpine or alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine. The rhythm was present, with changes in the acrophase, in parotids of rats kept during their gestation and postnatal life in constant light or dark. Results suggest that the circadian rhythm of alpha-amylase in parotid gland of young rats is endogenous, synchronized by the photoperiod, and with maternal coordination.


Anatomy and Embryology | 1989

Effects of continuous light on rat parotid gland structure and reactivity.

A. P. Chiarenza; E.G. Sanz; Nelia T. Vermouth; Agustín Aoki; S.L. Bellavia

SummaryThe effects of continuous light on ultrastructural organization and sympathetic secretory responses of the rat parotid gland are reported.After 50 days of continuous light exposure, the fine structure of the parotid gland exhibited features of enhanced secretory activity as judged by the striking development of rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi complexes, the depletion of secretory granules and the increased turnover of secretory cells. The secretory responses of parotid gland to isoproterenol revealed that continuous light induced a 30% increase in amylase release. This secretory hyperactivity appears to be related to a postsynaptic supersensitivity of sympathetic fibers of the autonomic nervous system.


Archives of Oral Biology | 1981

Sex difference in the rate of postnatal development of amylase activity in the rat parotid gland

S.L. Bellavia; E.G. Sanz; Nelia T. Vermouth; Maria L. Rins; A. Aoki

Abstract Changes in α-amylase (α-1-4-glucan-4-glucanohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.1.) activity after birth were in 3 stages. Significant differences were found between the sexes in the development of α-amylase activity. During the first stage, amylase activity increased more rapidly in females, whilst, in the second stage, the increase was greater in males.


Archives of Oral Biology | 1993

Effect of sympathetic denervation of the pineal gland on maternal co-ordination of the circadian rhythm of α-amylase in parotid gland from young rats

S.L. Bellavia; E.G. Sanz; R.V. Gallará; A. Carpentieri; Nelia T. Vermouth

Twenty-five-day-old rats maintained in constant darkness since birth and born from mothers kept in the dark since the 14th day of pregnancy showed a circadian rhythm of alpha-amylase content in parotid glands, which may be explained by a mechanism of maternal co-ordination. Rats in the same conditions, except that their mothers had been submitted to bilateral excision of the superior cervical ganglia 30 days before mating, did not show diurnal variations of alpha-amylase activity in the parotid glands. When ganglionectomized mothers were treated with a daily dose of melatonin (1 mg/kg) from the 14th day of gestation up to the 10th day of lactation, their litters showed significant diurnal variations of amylase in the parotid glands, suggesting a role of the maternal pineal gland in the maternal-fetal and/or maternal-neonatal transfer of photoperiodic information.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 1984

Circadian rhythm of lactate dehydrogenase in rat testis

Nelia T. Vermouth; Rubén H. Ponce; Carlota Carriazo; Antonio Blanco

Activity of total lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and of the isozyme X (LDH X or C4) have been determined at 2 hr intervals during 24 hr cycles in testis of adult rats maintained since birth in a photoperiod of 14 hr light: 10 hr dark. LDH X activity of epididymal sections (caput, corpus and cauda) from the same animals was also determined. Total LDH and LDH X activities in testis exhibited circadian rhythms with different timing. LDH X in the three portions of epididymis showed diurnal variations similar to those in testis. Rats subjected to constant light or constant dark presented marked modifications of LDH X profiles, indicating that the photoperiod plays a synchronizer role. While total soluble proteins did not show variations in testis of rats exposed to the photoperiod, a circadian rhythm was demonstrated in animals maintained in constant light or dark.


Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 1982

Effect of sexual steroids upon ontogeny of alpha-amylase of rat parotid gland

S.L. Bellavia; E.G. Sanz; Nelia T. Vermouth; A. Blanco

SummaryThe effect of gonadectomy (at the 10th day of life) and treatment with sexual steroids (during the first month) upon development of alpha-amylase activity in rat parotid gland has been studied.Alpha-amylase specific activity of parotid glands from 20-day-old orchidectomized rats and from 25-day-old ovariectomized animals was significantly higher than that of intact male and female rats of the same age respectively. Spayed males treated with testosterone (10 μg/day on the 13th, 15th, and 17th day) and ovariectomized rats treated with oestradiol (2.5 μg/day from the 16th to the 22nd day) showed values of enzymic activity similar to those of normal animals.Results indicate that oestradiol and testosterone have an inhibitory effect upon the increase of alpha-amylase activity in parotid gland during a very defined period of development.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology | 1986

Ontogeny of alpha-amylase circadian rhythms in rat parotid gland

E.G. Sanz; Nelia T. Vermouth; S.L. Bellavia

The content of alpha-amylase (alpha-1,4-glucan-4-glucanohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.1.) and total soluble proteins of parotid glands (from rats exposed to a photoperiod of 14 hr light: 10 hr dark), have been determined every 2 or 3 hr over 24 hr periods in 15, 25 and 90-day-old rats. In 35-, 45- and 72-day-old rats, determinations were performed only at 0100 and 1400 hr. The alpha-amylase and total soluble protein contents from 90-day-old rats show a circadian variation, with a maximum value at 2200 hr and a minimum at 1400 hr. Parotids from 15- and 25-day-old rats also show a circadian rhythm. The minimum value is recorded at 0100 hr and the maximum at 1400 hr. At day 35 and after, there is an inversion of the amylase rhythm. In immature rats, it appears that alpha-amylase and soluble protein are under the influence of another synchronizer, whose timing is independent of that imposed by mastication of solid food.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 1986

Lactate dehydrogenase X, malate dehydrogenase and total protein in rat spermatozoa during epididymal transit

Nelia T. Vermouth; Carlota Carriazo; Rubén H. Ponce; Antonio Blanco

Lactate dehydrogenase isozyme X (LDH X), malate dehydrogenase (MDH) and total soluble protein have been determined in lysates of spermatozoa isolated from caput, corpus and cauda of rat epididymis. Transit of spermatozoa through epididymis is accompanied by a reduction of LDH X, MDH and total protein per cell in sexually rested animals. The profiles of reduction along epididymal segments are different for the three variables studied. Mating with receptive females during the 5 days prior to determinations increases significantly the levels of MDH in spermatozoa from all sections of epididymis and produces increase of total soluble protein in the cells contained in cauda.


Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 1981

Ontogenesis of alpha-amylase in rat parotid gland during postnatal development

S.L. Bellavia; E.G. Sanz; Nelia T. Vermouth; L. Rins; Agustín Aoki

SummaryChanges in α-amylase (α-1,4-glucan-4-glucanohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.1) of parotid gland were investigated during postnatal development of the rat. Modifications in amylase activity after birth allow the distinction of three stages which can be correlated with the morphologic development of the parotid gland. Significant sexual differences in the evolution of α-amylase activity were found. During the first stage (from birth to the 20th day) there is a higher increase in females, while males have a more pronounced increment in the second stage (from the 20th to the 30th day). By means of gel electrophoresis of parotid extracts, four molecular forms of amylase can be separated. The slowest migrating band (Form 1) is not detected at the initial stage.


Archives of Oral Biology | 2013

Impairment of rat tooth eruption in pups born to mothers exposed to chronic stress during pregnancy.

P.A. Fontanetti; R.C. De Lucca; P.M. Mandalunis; Nelia T. Vermouth

OBJECTIVE Tooth eruption is a multifactorial process in which bone tissue plays a prevailing role. In this study we evaluated the bone overlying the developing tooth germ and the degree of tooth eruption of the first mandibular molar in pups born to mothers subjected to constant light during pregnancy. DESIGN Pregnant rats were divided into two groups: mothers chronically exposed to a 12:12 light/light cycle (LL) from day 10 to 20 of pregnancy and controls (C) maintained on a 12:12 h light/dark cycle. Pups from each group were euthanized at the age 3 or 15 days. Buccolingually oriented sections of mandibles were stained with haematoxylin-eosin or for histochemical detection of tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP). The histomorphometric parameters evaluated were bone volume, number of osteoclasts, TRAP+ bone surface, number of TRAP+ and TRAP- osteoclasts per mm(2) and degree of tooth eruption (mm). RESULTS It was found an increase in bone volume (LL: 58.14±4.24 vs. C: 32.31±2.16; p<0.01) and a decrease in the number of osteoclasts (LL: 3.5±0.65 vs. C: 8.03±1.31; p<0.01) and TRAP+ cells (LL: 0.84±0.53 vs. C: 8.59±1.26; p<0.01) in 3-day-old pups born to LL-exposed mothers. These observations are consistent with the decrease in the degree of tooth eruption observed in 15-day-old experimental pups (LL: -0.605±0.05 vs. C: -0.342±0.02; p<0.0001). CONCLUSION Our results suggest that chronic constant light applied as a pre-natal stressor impairs the resorptive capacity of osteoclasts involved in the formation of the eruption pathway and consequently the degree of tooth eruption.

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S.L. Bellavia

National University of Cordoba

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E.G. Sanz

National University of Cordoba

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Agustín Aoki

National University of Cordoba

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Antonio Blanco

National University of Cordoba

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Carlota Carriazo

National University of Cordoba

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R.V. Gallará

National University of Cordoba

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Rubén H. Ponce

National University of Cordoba

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A. Aoki

National University of Cordoba

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A. Blanco

National University of Cordoba

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A. Carpentieri

National University of Cordoba

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